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The Community Service Police serves as the Sudanese religious police. Originally called the Public Order Police, the enforcement agency was established in 1993 by President Omar al-Bashir . [ 20 ] The Public Order Law was initiated by the Sudanese government in the state of Khartoum in 1992, and later applied to all states .
The Community Service Police serves as the Sudanese religious police. Originally called the Public Order Police, the enforcement agency was established in 1993 by President Omar al-Bashir.[13] The Public Order Law was initiated by the Sudanese government in the state of Khartoum in 1992, and later applied to all states.
The Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Arabic: هيئة الأمر بالمعروف والنهي عن المنكر, romanized: hayʾa al-ʾamr bil-maʿrūf wan-nahī ʿan al-munkar, abbreviated CPVPV, colloquially termed hai’a (committee), and known as mutawa, mutaween and by other similar names and translations in English-language sources) is a government ...
China's government is calling on protesters to turn themselves in after a crowd clashed with police over plans to demolish a mosque in the country's southwest as President Xi Jinping’s ...
Mosque crawlers or rakers were informants dispatched by the New York Police Department after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks to monitor Islamic people in the city. [1] [2] From 2001 until the program was exposed in 2011, The NYPD Intelligence Division used these informants to photograph license plates of congregants, track the ethnic makeup of worshippers, and collect other ...
A Muslim congregation that has waged a five-year battle for the right to build a mosque has moved 'one step closer' to finally having a place to pray. Federal judge rules New Jersey town ...
He currently sits in a county jail after breaking six windows from Nob Hill's Masjid al-Tawheed mosque. San Francisco resident Robert Gray, 35, was booked on one felony count of vandalism and a ...
The Jama Masjid was frequently used for non-religious, political purposes, against the rules instituted. While the British could police and clamp down on political activities in public spaces, the Jama Masjid was a religious space and was hence protected from such action, by both law (Religious Endowment Act, 1863) and the sentiments of Delhi. [21]